Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Crain’s…
* Tribune | Top candidates for the US House in Illinois’ 2nd, 7th, 8th and 9th districts for the 2026 election: The domino effect that began in late April with U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin’s announcement that he wasn’t seeking a sixth term has caused two members of Congress — U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly of Matteson and U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi of Schaumburg — to declare their interest in Durbin’s seat. That means their spots in Congress are opening up. In addition, much of the north and northwest suburbs will see their first new members of Congress in nearly three decades as U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky is retiring at the end of her term. * WAND | Violent crime reporting proposal arrives on Pritzker’s desk, awaits signature: Police departments would also be required to document when each crime occurred and the status of criminal cases. “The purpose of this is to streamline the process to get away from the clearance rate number that we’re using right now that is a bit opaque and doesn’t provide true justice for people,” said Rep. Kam Buckner (D-Chicago). “The amendment also brings ICJIA and the Illinois State Police to neutrality on the bill.” * Crain’s | Chicago-area home prices rising at four times the nation’s: In the Chicago metro area, where home prices used to be among the slowest-rising in the U.S., prices in May went up at four times the speed of the nation. That’s according to reports from Illinois Realtors and the National Association of Realtors, released separately June 23. A month ago, Chicago-area prices were going up at more than three times the national pace, and before that, they were going up at more than double the U.S. rate. * Tribune | City mum on what documents it provided ICE in Streets and Sanitation subpoena: After first asserting it did not turn over personal information about city workers to U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement, Mayor Brandon Johnson’s Law Department is now hedging on how exactly the administration responded to a federal subpoena for employment eligibility forms. Johnson Corporation Counsel Mary Richardson-Lowry told reporters last week the city’s response to an ICE subpoena for the forms of Streets and Sanitation employees that determine whether they can legally work in the U.S. contained no personal information about those workers. But on Monday, a Law Department spokesperson declined to go that far when the Tribune asked about what documents ICE did receive and what information they contain. * Sun-Times | Mayor Brandon Johnson credits tipped minimum wage law with fueling growth in Chicago: Samoora Williams, an organizer with advocacy group One Fair Wage, bartended in Chicago from 2019 to 2022. She made a base pay of $10 an hour; additional tips did not bring her up to minimum wage, she said on Monday. Williams wasn’t aware of the federal law mandating employers pay minimum wage if tips don’t bring workers to that baseline. One Fair Wage organizer James Rodriguez worked as a host at a Lincoln Park Italian restaurant for two years. He said the eatery paid tipped workers minimum wage if they didn’t reach that threshold with tips. But “a lot of workers don’t know they’re supposed to be making that,” said Rodriguez. “These are so many cases of abuse of the law. The city doesn’t have the manpower to go after those restaurants.” * Sun-Times | Patients evacuated from Weiss Memorial Hospital over heat suffer again during heat wave at new facility: Then the heat came. Last Tuesday, Weiss evacuated its entire inpatient unit after failing to fix the hospital’s air conditioning system as temperatures inside the building rose to 90 degrees and a heatwave moved into the city. Hospital leaders blamed the problem on an aging air conditioning system that had not been maintained by previous owners, which forced the 239-bed acute care hospital to transfer or discharge 45 patients. The AC may not be fixed for two more weeks, they said. * Tribune | Indicted on fraud charges, ex-Loretto Hospital exec wages bizarre PR campaign from Dubai: And while the news release, dated Sunday, claimed Ahmed is still based in Chicago, he actually fled to Dubai before the first charges were filed and has not returned to answer to either case. A warrant for his arrest remained active as of this week, court records show. The news release was the latest in a strange public relations campaign that appears aimed at rebuilding Ahmed’s image and possibly courting the attention of President Donald Trump, who has recently granted executive clemency in a number of notable Chicago-area cases, from Gangster Disciples boss Larry Hoover to former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich. * WGN | ‘Potential death’: Chicago firefighters, alderman raise concerns with OSHA-backed policy change: “There’s going to be a lot of buildings burning down and potential death,” said Patrick Cleary, President of Chicago Fire Fighters Union Local 2. “That’s what’s gonna happen.” The specific issue Cleary is fired up about involves new tactical guidelines affecting the first fire engine to respond on scene to a fire. According to the new policy, the officer on smaller, four-man rigs responding to fires must become the incident commander, with two other firefighters performing specific duties. * Block Club | Wicker Park Neighbors Fight ‘Atrocious’ Rat Problem In Dean Park. So Far, The Rats Are Winning: The city has taken some action to remedy the issue this spring, with 311 requests showing the Department of Streets and Sanitation baited the park with rat poison three times since May, including on Monday. Ald. Daniel La Spata (1st) said his office is also working on improving sanitary conditions in the surrounding area. But neighbors have continued to see rats in the park after the first two baitings, with some digging new holes over the weekend along the fence near Gutstadt’s apartment, Gutstadt said. * Crain’s | Can buying pot be as easy as buying groceries? A Chicago company aims to find out.: Verano Holdings, which has 157 stores across 13 states, is opening a pilot location in Cave Creek, Arizona, that’s more like a convenience store than the traditional dispensaries that most companies operate. This type of setup is rare in the tightly regulated industry, where most products are kept behind the counter and handed over by staff after ID checks. * Tribune | PETA names Chicago the country’s most vegan-friendly city: Brody said PETA chose Chicago because it has become so easy “to enjoy classic Chicago dishes” in vegan form, citing Buona’s Italian beefless sandwich and Kitchen 17’s vegan deep-dish pizza. At Runaway Cow, Eichhorn offers fully vegan beef sandwiches and Chicago dogs. Rafael Tenorio, who lives in LaGrange, has been vegan for 10 years. He stopped eating meat after he began volunteering at animal shelters, joining his daughter in the lifestyle. He has found it easy to maintain in the Chicago area. Most restaurants, he said, can accommodate vegans even if their menus are not designed for them. * WBBM | Chicago journalism icon Craig Dellimore retires after 42 years at WBBM: “I think what made everyone think twice was, frankly, the civil unrest of the 60s, and going forward, because people realized that you didn’t have a variety of voices, that they didn’t see it coming,” said Dellimore. “I think that’s really what it was. People didn’t see all of this coming, and said maybe we ought to either train and or hire people who had a different perspective.” * Fox Chicago | What’s happening in Chicago this summer? A lot—from jazz nights to burgers and beer: This summer, Millennium Park and the Shedd Aquarium are offering fun and unique experiences open to the public from May through August. While Jazzin’ at the Shedd requires a ticket, all concerts and movies at Millennium Park are free. Check out the highlights below for details on event dates, performers, and what to expect. * Block Club | West Side’s ‘Unsung’ Blues Legacy Gets Its Due In New Austin Exhibit : “Unsung Austin-West Side Stories,” organized and presented by the Chicago Blues Museum, explores 70 years of musical history on the West Side through large reprints of archival photos, banners and posters along with extensive descriptions. The free exhibit is hosted in the lobby of the park’s cultural center, 5610 W. Lake St. This is the first time the West Side is getting an exhibit that chronicles its unique history and contributions to music, said Gregg Parker, founder of the Chicago Blues Museum and curator of the exhibit. * Daily Herald | It’s so hot you could fry an egg on the buckling pavement — asphalt eruptions dot suburbs: Heat indexes above 100 degrees and humidity create perfect conditions for asphalt and concrete blowouts, IDOT explained. When there’s no more room for the pavement to expand, it pushes up. Bartlett drivers were down to one lane along Route 59 north of Stearns Road on Sunday afternoon, when the roadway buckled. More street meltdowns occurred Monday in Buffalo Grove. * Daily Herald | Homer Glen names former Willowbrook police chief, real estate agent, as trustee: Schaller worked for the Willowbrook Police Department for 28 years, including five years as police chief. For the last two years, he has been a real estate broker in Orland Park. Schaller said his extensive background in government will make him an effective board member, and said he’s worked hand in hand with various municipal departments during his tenure in Willowbrook. Schaller said he is confident and ready to get to work on the Homer Glen Village Board. “I’m hitting the ground running,” he said. * Sun-Times | For older adults, a robust network of friends, relatives key to better health outcomes, study finds: The analysis was led by Lissette Piedra, a professor of social work at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, who found three types of social networks emerged among older adults. Those in an “enriched” network — a larger social circle filled with diverse relationships that included friends and relatives from different social circles — reported better health scores and lower rates of loneliness, Piedra said. Researchers used a health indicator model in which adults in the study ranked their own health. * WIFR | ‘Starved Rock Killer’ Chester Weger dead at 86, reports say: Chester Weger, the man convicted of slaying a woman at an Illinois state park in 1960, has died, according to a report from Shaw Local. He was 86 years old. Weger, also known as the “Starved Rock Killer,’ spent nearly 60 years in prison for killing Lillian Oetting, one of three women found dead in St. Louis Canyon. * WGLT | Bloomington council OKs updated massage business regulations in effort to halt illicit operations: “Really, what we want is compliance, and we want to get a regulatory structure in place,” said City Manager Jeff Jurgens. “We understand that we have a lot of great massage therapists out there and establishments, and we understand that the illicit ones are likely not going to go through this process. But we will use this regulatory process to shut them down.” Two weeks after tabling an original proposal, the city council on Monday unanimously approved an adjusted ordinance to include application fees and other regulations for massage establishments. * WCIA | Effingham man accused of human trafficking after pastor, others help victim escape: “A trusted third party who is the pastor of a local church brought the juvenile to the police department to make the report,” officials said. “The pastor had previously attended an informational meeting for community leaders on how to be an advocate for victims, which was led by Effingham Police officers.” After the initial report, the victim received immediate medical attention and was given protective assistance from child-victim crisis professionals. * WaPo | Supreme Court for now allows Trump to deport migrants to ‘third countries’ : The court’s order, which drew a sharp dissent from the three liberal justices, was the latest of several allowing President Donald Trump to move forward with a major change in policy while litigation on the issue continues in lower courts. Each has been made as part of the court’s “emergency docket,” which means they are decided based on truncated court filings, not oral argument, and the justices do not always explain their reasoning. * NYT | The Global A.I. Divide: Nations with little or no A.I. compute power are running into limits in scientific work, in the growth of young companies and in talent retention. Some officials have become alarmed by how the need for computing resources has made them beholden to foreign corporations and governments. “Oil-producing countries have had an oversized influence on international affairs; in an A.I.-powered near future, compute producers could have something similar since they control access to a critical resource,” said Vili Lehdonvirta, an Oxford professor who conducted the research on A.I. data centers with his colleagues Zoe Jay Hawkins and Boxi Wu. * Rockwood Notes | A Profile: Nicholas J. Pritzker: While his grandsons Jay (the financier) and Bob (the operator) are often credited with the family’s vast wealth, and his son A.N. was the first real dealmaker, Nicholas played a different, but arguably more fundamental, role. It’s not a story of high profile deals but of perseverance through relentless hardship and tragedy, pieced together from an autobiography he wrote entirely from memory. He was the family’s first lawyer and, inspired by the Rothschilds’ centuries of success, unified the family’s assets under a shared ethos that would define the family for nearly a century. * The Atlantic | The Archaic Sex-Discrimination Case the Supreme Court Is Reviving: By invoking Geduldig, the Roberts Court is doing what the Supreme Court of earlier eras did: supplying tortured legal logic to justify long-standing hierarchies. In Plessy v. Ferguson, for example, the Court insisted that laws that required white and Black individuals to ride in different train cars were not impermissible racial discrimination—the rules applied to and burdened everyone, after all. That logic sounds like the thread in Skrmetti that maintains that bans on gender-affirming care don’t constitute gender-identity discrimination because the bans allow transgender and cisgender kids to access hormones and puberty blockers—just not for treatment of gender dysphoria. In Korematsu v. United States, the Court claimed that the internment of Americans of Japanese descent did not constitute racial discrimination; the policy was about national security. That reasoning tracks with Skrmetti’s insistence that the health-care bans do not discriminate on the basis of sex or gender identity; they are about age and medical procedures. * WaPo | The plan to vaccinate all Americans, despite RFK Jr.: The American College of Physicians, one group involved in the talks, said Kennedy’s recent changes to the ACIP and lack of transparency in the process “puts at risk decades of progress in vaccine development, access, and public trust, and contributes to confusion and uncertainty.” If the panel departs from long-standing recommendations, “we will need to look elsewhere for reliable information guided by the best-available evidence to guide the use of vaccines,” said Jason Goldman, the group’s president, in a statement.
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Musical interlude: Mick Ralphs
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * AP…
* This Ralphs song truly swings… I can’t get enough
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Ten years and $9 million
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * More than eight years after the old station was destroyed, a groundbreaking ceremony was held for a new station, which won’t be completed for another two years and is projected to cost almost $9 million…
* This is what commuters are getting for almost $9 million… ![]() Not trying to pick on Metra here, just pointing out how long it takes to build anything - and how expensive it is. * Of course, that little station pales in comparison to the $80 million Damen Green Line Station and is barely a speck of dust next to the CTA’s $5.75 billion Red Line extension - which works out to a mind-boggling billion dollars per mile. * The High Speed Rail Association looked at this a few years ago…
Discuss. * Related…
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * AInvest…
* Illinois Treasurer Frerichs…
* The Question: Should Illinois allow the state treasurer to invest in cryptocurrency? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.
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Pritzker to announce reelection bid Thursday, sources say
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers got the news first yesterday. Politico…
* NBC Chicago…
* Fox 32 Political Correspondent Paris Schutz… Thoughts? * More…
* WGN | Pritzker to announce reelection bid Thursday: sources: Pritzker has reportedly scheduled multiple campaign-style events this Thursday to kick off his third run for governor. The next gubernatorial election in Illinois is November 3, 2026.
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It’s almost a law
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* WAND…
* The Crain’s Editorial Board…
* WAND…
* WGLT…
* Meanwhile… Forbes wrote about SB1938, a bill that never made it out of committee…
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Caption contest!
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * From my high school days… ![]() I’m the Fender copy bass player, in case you couldn’t figure out where I am. Good times.
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Why Are Tax-Exempt Hospitals Getting Rich?
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Across Illinois, big hospital systems and PBMs are abusing the 340B drug discount program – making massive profits while patients drown in medical bills. One whistleblower called it “laundering money.” Here’s how the scam works: big hospitals buy discounted 340B drugs, bill patients full price, then split the difference with for-profit pharmacies and PBMs. 340B was meant to help Illinois communities in need. But there are no rules requiring hospitals and PBMs to pass savings on to patients. No transparency. No oversight. Just higher costs for working families, small businesses, and taxpayers. Meanwhile, tax-exempt hospitals cash in – and PBMs get a cut too.
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Open thread
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Evangeline… For the songs she sings * Keep it Illinois-centric, please. Thanks much.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: The Trump administration is making an unprecedented reach for data held by states. NPR…
* Daily Herald | Metra, Pace and CTA now have a day pass to ride all three systems: The new fare will be offered for six months as a pilot program and could be made permanent in 2026, depending on funding, officials said. Metra, Pace and the Chicago Transit Authority are facing a massive budget shortfall of $771 million next year. […] The day pass will cost $2.50 more than the usual Metra day pass. * Decatur Now | Amid soaring temps and increased prices, Citizens Utility Board calling on utilities to work with customers: Ameren has estimated the increase will cost customers an average of 18 to 22 percent, or about $38 to $46 more per month over the summer. The spike is connected to an increase in the price for reserve power, also called “capacity.” CUB argues that capacity costs have skyrocketed largely because of policy problems with the power grid operator for central and southern Illinois, the Midcontinent Independent System Operator, or MISO, which runs an auction that determines the capacity price. * Tribune | Top candidates for the US House in Illinois’ 2nd, 7th, 8th and 9th districts for the 2026 election: The domino effect that began in late April with U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin’s announcement that he wasn’t seeking a sixth term has caused two members of Congress — U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly of Matteson and U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi of Schaumburg — to declare their interest in Durbin’s seat. That means their spots in Congress are opening up. In addition, much of the north and northwest suburbs will see their first new members of Congress in nearly three decades as U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky is retiring at the end of her term. * Tribune | Illinois must build 227,000 units in 5 years to keep up with housing demand, report finds: The joint study published Tuesday by the Illinois Economic Policy Institute and the Project for Middle Class Renewal at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign found that although the rental and for-sale housing markets in Chicago and Illinois as a whole remain more affordable than many coastal cities, such as New York and Los Angeles, and some other states, Illinois still faces a severe housing shortage that is escalating affordability challenges. * BND | IDOT using ‘safer, faster and cheaper’ full closures for roadwork projects: In recent years, the Illinois Department of Transportation has been using full closures of major roadways in the metro-east during construction because it offers three distinct advantages. “We have found that full closures are safer, faster and cheaper,” said Joel Cumby, IDOT’s District 8 project implementation engineer based in Collinsville. “Now, we will look at it, but we will only use a full closure if we do have good parallel routes, good alternate routes — a good detour.” * Sarah Moskowitz | Frustrated — even ‘heartbroken’ — Nicor customers wonder when enough is enough: Nicor Gas usually delivers the heat, but at a recent Illinois Commerce Commission public forum in Joliet the utility was the one on the hot seat — over escalating bills. One Nicor customer walked to the microphone and directly addressed the utility bigwigs who were on stage to champion their proposal for the largest gas hike in Illinois history. The consumer said she was “heartbroken” over high gas bills that were burdening families. “We’re still suffering,” she said, calling on Nicor to lower bills so they are “truly affordable for all of us.” Given Nicor’s track record, it’s doubtful Illinois’ biggest gas utility got the message. Nicor has slapped its over 2 million customers with four rate hikes since 2017–raising delivery rates by 114%, or $747 million, and helping its parent, Southern Co., laugh all the way to the bank with $25.2 billion in profits * Daily Herald | After narrow loss in 2024, Maria Peterson making second bid for state House: Months after falling less than 50 votes short of a seat in the state legislature, Maria Peterson announced Monday she will again run for the 52nd District House post. […] “Since the last election, I have committed countless hours to electing Democrats locally, and worked with Barrington Giving Day, the Rotary Club, and others to help families who are drowning in property taxes, paying more for child care than their mortgage, and skipping doctor visits due to costs,” Peterson said in Monday’s announcement. “I am ready to take this and years of fighting for our community to Springfield.” * Decatur Now | State Rep Sue Scherer announces intention to run for re-election: June 23, 2025 – State Representative Sue Scherer has announced her intent to run for re-election in the 2026 election. […] Scherer notes her work to increase educational funding, DCFS reform and for bringing billions of dollars in infrastructural advances to the 96th district. * Financial Advisor | State Budget Wounds Intensify From Trump, DOGE Policy Shifts: Illinois Governor JB Pritzker signed a $55 billion budget for the 2026 fiscal year that is smaller than his proposal in February. Pritzker has said no state can backfill the billions of dollars the US government provides for services such as Medicaid. “This year, that task was made harder by the turbulent national economic conditions and unstable federal funds flow caused by the chaos and ineptitude of the Trump administration,” Pritzker said. “The Trump slump is effecting the entire nation.” * LSR | The Richest Men In Illinois And The Billion-Dollar Sports Betting Grudge: Bluhm’s portfolio features city-shaping commercial properties in Chicago, Los Angeles, and Boston, along with personal residences at a surf club in Miami and a mountain retreat in Aspen. He’s served on the board for the Art Institute of Chicago and the Whitney Museum in New York, and his homes are adorned with pieces from his $300 million personal collection. He has a wife and three kids, an ownership stake in the Bulls and the White Sox, and he once hosted a birthday party for Barack Obama. He is a prolific philanthropist. Neil Bluhm doesn’t need anything. But what he seems to want more than everything is revenge against two of the country’s biggest sports betting and online casino companies. His grudge against FanDuel and DraftKings has lasted for at least a decade, driven millions of dollars in political donations, and found validation from another of Illinois’ wealthiest men. * Sun-Times | CPS needs to borrow to avoid cuts, CTU chief Stacy Davis Gates argues: Davis Gates said the mayor has only supported taking out a loan to manage the structural deficit in the short term without laying off school workers or cutting programs. She said the real long-term solution remains persuading the state Legislature and governor to provide adequate funding. According to the state’s own formula, CPS should be getting about $1.2 billion more each year. * Sun-Times | Heat wave linked to rise in opioid overdoses in Chicago over the weekend, health experts say: Sixty opioid overdoses were reported Friday and Saturday — including more than 37 Saturday alone — triggering the city’s spike alert system, the Chicago Department of Public Health said. […] The heat wave may have also played a role in the spike in overdoses, according to Jenny Hau, medical director of behavioral health and interim deputy commissioner at CDPH. “We always see a seasonal increase in the number of overdoses in Chicago, as well as many other places in this country and around the world,” Hau said. “So certainly heat has a pretty close correlation in terms of the amount of overdose activities.” * WGN | Woman arrested, charged in connection to anti-ICE protest where car drove through crowd: According to the Chicago Police Department, 30-year-old Dierdre Kemp was charged with one felony count each of aggressive reckless driving/bodily harm and aggravated fleeing/bodily injury, one misdemeanor count of driving on a suspended license, and one citation each of operating an uninsured motor vehicle and involuntary committed obedience to police officers. Kemp turned herself in at the 1st District Chicago police station on South State Street on Thursday, June 19, where she was then placed under arrested and later charged. * Crain’s | Former Black McDonald’s franchise operators back upcoming boycott: The boycott is being organized by The People’s Union USA, a grassroots advocacy organization led by Illinois resident John Schwarz. It’s the same group that championed the massive “economic blackout” in February that impacted brands nationwide. In an Instagram post promoting the McDonald’s boycott, Schwarz accused the Chicago-based company of price gouging, exploiting tax loopholes, suppressing workers’ rights and practicing “performative DEI,” though he did not offer specific examples or evidence of those claims. * WTTW | Comedy and Crime Fighting Join Forces in Chicago for Police Learning Leadership Skills: Officials at the University of Chicago Crime Lab’s Policing Leadership Academy brought members of The Second City, Chicago’s storied improv theater, to teach police leaders the more diverse skills found in improv exercises — like thinking on your feet, reserving judgment and fully listening. The academy, a workshop taught over five months, tackles some serious topics like to make data-driven decisions or how to help officers handle on-the-job trauma. * Block Club | The Ultimate Guide To Chicago Ice Cream 2025: 100+ Spots For Scoops, Popsicles, Gelato, Italian Ice And More: Block Club rounded up more than 100 ice cream shops, cafes, bakeries, paleterias and other Chicago businesses ready to dish out loads of summer favorites this year. Menus and hours can vary from shop to shop, so consider calling ahead of your trip. * Daily Southtown | Residents of Park Forest apartments swelter as air conditioning goes unfixed; village promises fines: Residents of a large Park Forest apartment complex that has been without air conditioning for several days complained Monday the problem hasn’t been fixed, while the village promised to levy fines against the property owner. The village said Monday it is demanding staff at Autumn Ridge, 119 E. Sycamore, “work quickly to restore air conditioning for its residents” and said daily fines will be imposed. * Daily Herald | ‘Basically reckless driving’: Schaumburg enacts regulations on use of e-bikes and scooters: The village board this month approved a measure setting a minimum rider age of 16 years old, requiring riders to wear helmets and use vehicle lights at night, and prohibiting their operation on sidewalks. “It’s basically reckless driving that’s going on right now,” Mayor Tom Dailly said. “I’m seeing it all the time myself.” * Tribune | Wilmette adopts initial plan to boost affordable housing from 4.8% to required 10%: The plan, approved unanimously by the Wilmette Village Board on June 10, is the first piece in a more robust housing plan that will be developed by the village and the Wilmette Housing Commission over the next 12 to 18 months, Village Manager Michael Braiman said. “This is more of a bare bones plan that has to conform to certain requirements that the state lays out,” he said. * Aurora Beacon-News | Campton Hills considers annexation for 900-unit residential project after years of local opposition to area’s development: Another development project is under consideration for a plot of land in what is currently rural La Fox, an unincorporated community in Kane County, which multiple developers have tried and failed to turn into a housing development since the early 2000s. But, this time, the proposed plan — which features a less dense housing plan and is set to allocate more than half of the area to open space — has the backing of the local open space organizations which have previously opposed the area’s development. * CNN | NIH Froze Funding for Clinical Trials at Northwestern University. By Fall, They’ll Run Out of Funding: Brown became the first patient to enroll in the trial, which now has signed on more than 1,700 people and is designed to run for another four years. If it proves that some people can manage their AFib in an individualized way, it could revolutionize treatment for millions of Americans, reducing use of costly blood thinners that can come with unpleasant side effects. “This is huge,” Passman said. But he may never get the results. The trial is funded with $37 million from the U.S. National Institutes of Health, and Northwestern hasn’t received any funding from the federal biomedical research agency since the end of March. * Daily Southtown | Will County Board refuses to drop 143rd Street widening from transporation plan, but stalls passage: Recently, a bill authorizing the county to use quick-take powers to seize property along 143rd Street stalled in Springfield. Although the bill was not voted on by the time the legislature ended their spring session May 31, that does not stop the widening project. Will County began engineering studies in 2009 to widen 143rd Street from two to five lanes from State Street/Lemont Road to Bell Road. For more than a decade, county officials voiced their support for the project, and $6.2 million has already been spent. A $7 million federal grant earmarked for the project must be obligated by 2026. * WCBU | Bradley professor challenges incumbent Darin LaHood in U.S. House race: An adjunct economics professor at Bradley University in Peoria is joining the race for U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood’s seat because he says the financial policy just doesn’t “math up.” Before Joseph Albright taught accounting and other classes at Bradley, he was a campus police officer there for nine years. Before that he worked for almost a decade in health insurance. Albright says between his careers and his home life he has a personal stake in all the issues that form pillars of his campaign platform. * WCIA | DeWitt County getting new transportation system: “Piattran” will be available for DeWitt community members beginning July 1. Residents will be able to use the door-to-door service for medical appointments, work, shopping, social visits, and more. Officials said it will offer safe, reliable, and accessible transportation throughout the county. […] Piattran will serve the entire county, and will be available Monday through Friday from 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. Rides will cost between $1-$8, based on distance, and rider discounts (seniors and those with disabilities could qualify for a reduced cost). Piattran officials said rides must be scheduled by 2 p.m. the previous day. * WGLT | Rally crowd opposes federal immigration crackdown after ICE arrest at McLean County courthouse: LUCIR [Latinos United for Change and Immigrant Rights], The Immigration Project, and Punks Against Trump organized the rally. It came two weeks after Immigration and Customs Enforcement [ICE] took into custody a man who was at the McLean County courthouse for a criminal hearing. […] Alvarez said The Immigration Project wants to make sure everyone understands that national enforcement operations should be separated from local law enforcement and local court. “We’re in talks with the McLean County Board and we want to talk to Sheriff Lane and we want to talk to the court to make sure everyone is aware of and upholding state law under the Trust Act,” Alvarez said. * BND | O’Fallon school building damaged by mine subsidence. Here’s how it will be fixed: Mine subsidence has caused cracks in floors and both exterior and interior walls, which have gradually worsened with over the years. In one 18 month span, the floor dropped 9 inches on the north end of the school, O’Fallon Central School District 104 Superintendent Gabrielle Rodriguez said. “It was sickening to go in every day and watch these cracks widen,” Rodriguez said. “We had actual walls separating.” * WaPo | In West Virginia, Medicaid is a lifeline. GOP cuts could devastate the state.: At least five hospitals in West Virginia are at risk of immediate closure if the changes to Medicaid go into effect, said Rich Sutphin, president of the West Virginia Rural Health Association. (Hampshire Memorial is not among those five.) The state already struggles with access to maternity care, emergency medical transport and mental health, and has few hospitals that are able to perform complicated surgeries or treat high-risk patients. Sutphin said his group has been in “constant contact” with Capito, Justice and the state’s two House members, Reps. Carol Miller and Riley Moore, both Republicans who voted for Trump’s budget bill. * AInvest | Texas Allows Unlimited Bitcoin Investment in State Fund: With the proposal signed into law, Texas became the third state in the US with an official Bitcoin reserve, joining New Hampshire and Arizona. The statute does not cap allocations, meaning lawmakers could appropriate the full balance of the Economic Stabilization Fund. The ESF closed fiscal 2024 with $21 billion in cash and investments, according to the Comptroller’s annual cash report and supplemental ESF fact sheet. * NYT | Media Matters Sues F.T.C. Over Advertising Investigation: Media Matters said in its lawsuit that the Federal Trade Commission had employed “sweeping governmental powers to attempt to silence and harass an organization for daring to speak the truth.” The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Washington, D.C., claimed that the agency was trying to limit the organization’s free speech rights, and asked a judge to immediately halt the investigation. * Iowa Capital Dispatch | Iowa’s revenue shortfall becomes political fodder for 2026 campaign: The Iowa state government will be dipping into reserve funds to meet spending obligations in the 2026 fiscal year under the budget passed by lawmakers in 2025 — a decision Republican leaders said was accounted for when they approved income tax cuts, but that Democrats said could leave the state in a risky position in the case of economic downturns. The merits of the state tax cuts and Republicans’ budget decisions have become partisan talking points in the early days of the 2026 campaign, as candidates begin to position themselves to run for governor and other offices.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - This just in
Monday, Jun 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Monday, Jun 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Bloomberg Law | Justices Skip Illinois Workers’ Covid-19 Vaccine Mandate Case: Illinois government employees who unsuccessfully challenged the state’s Covid-19 vaccine mandates on religious grounds failed to convince the US Supreme Court to take a look at their dispute Monday. The petitioners, who work for state agencies, urged the justices to weigh in on whether an amendment to Illinois law on employees’ rights to refuse medical treatments that conflict with their religious beliefs stripped out those protections when it came to Covid-19 vaccines and testing, which they said ran afoul of the US Constitution. * Tribune | State Sen. Emil Jones III to face retrial on bribery charges in 2026 — when he’ll also be up for reelection: U.S. District Judge Andrea Wood on Friday set a trial date of Jan. 12, which will be nine months after his first trial ended in a mistrial when a jury deadlocked on all counts. If he chooses to run, Jones will have to submit signatures to get on the ballot by late November, a little over a month before his trial. The case, which is expected to last three or four weeks, would be long over before the Democratic primary in March, and a conviction would almost certainly force him from the ballot. * Fox Illinois | Decatur racino promises $27M boost, 300 jobs; awaits legislative approval: While the bill gained momentum in the Spring, it never came up for a vote. Senator Turner says there was concerns, in part, from local business that 900 gaming position at the site could take revenue away from them, as people would be at the track instead. She expects the bill to be discuss in the Fall, and changes could be made to help it pass. * WGLT | Students can soon earn automatic admission to state’s universities, hoping to keep more in Illinois: The Direct Admission Program [DAP] will require public universities to offer admission to any student who meets their established GPA standard, according to the bill synopsis. Additionally, qualifying community college students who have completed 30 credit hours and are eligible to transfer to a public university will be able to do so. The program begins with the 2027-28 academic year. * Tribune | Embattled Kenwood shelter housing migrants and homeless Chicagoans to close in coming months: A Kenwood shelter housing both migrants and Chicagoans experiencing homelessness will close in the coming months following a divide amongst neighbors, according to an email update from state Sen. Robert Peters. […] Peters said he was notified of the closure by city and Illinois Department of Human Services officials at 3:15 p.m. Friday. Those currently housed at the shelter will move to new facilities over the next three to six months, he said. * NBC Chicago | Flags at half-staff in Illinois ahead of funeral for CPD officer Krystal Rivera: According to a memo from Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, all flags in Illinois were ordered to fly at half-staff beginning at sunrise Monday. Flags are set to remain at half-staff until sunset on Wednesday, the memo said. According to the Chicago Police Department, visitation for Officer Rivera will be held from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday, at Montclair-Lucania Funeral Home, located at 6901 W. Belmont Ave. The funeral will be held Wednesday at Living Word Christian Center, located at 7600 Roosevelt Rd. in Forest Park. * Crain’s | Duckworth warns Chicago could see LA-style troop deployment next: Duckworth warns, however, it’s not protests over ICE raids that people should be focused on. “What he’s doing in L.A. isn’t about the protests in L.A.,” she told the audience during Crain’s Power Lunch today at the Hilton Chicago. “There are two points for what he did in L.A., with calling up the National Guard and sending in the Marines: One was to distract from the really bad press he was getting on Medicaid.” * Block Club | NW Side Alderpeople Want Out Of Anti-Gentrification Zone, Saying It’s ‘Punishing’ Longtime Homeowners: Alds. Felix Cardona, Jr. (31st) and Gilbert Villegas (36th) introduced an amendment last week to exclude their wards from the Northwest Side Preservation Ordinance, which passed overwhelmingly in September after years of community action and went into effect in October. The legislation seeks to better protect two-, three- and four-flat apartments and help longtime residents in Avondale, Hermosa, Logan Square, Humboldt Park and West Town stay in their homes by increasing demolition fees for developers and making it easier to build two-flats instead of single-family homes. * Block Club | Lake Michigan Has Fallen Nearly 4 Feet Since 2020, Changing The Shape Of Chicago’s Lakefront: Lake Michigan’s water levels have been steadily decreasing the past five years since a record high in 2020, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The lake is down about 3.5 feet between May 2020 and this May, data shows. [..] In Edgewater, a new path between two popular beaches has exposed a protected natural area to beachgoers. And in South Shore, neighbors whose buildings were threatened by elevated lake levels are now seeing a reprieve. * CBS Chicago | Former Illinois senator Carol Moseley Braun releases memoir “Trailblazer: Perseverance in Life and Politics”: Moseley Braun hit the political spotlight and broke the glass ceiling in 1992, when the Chicago native was elected to the U.S. Senate, becoming the first Black woman ever to accomplish that. She also once ran for mayor of Chicago, though she lost to Rahm Emanuel. She would go on to make history again when she was appointed as ambassador to New Zealand and Samoa. Her pioneering and sometimes controversial political careers is documented in her new memoir “Trailblazer: Perseverance in Life and Politics.” The book is out Tuesday. * Sun-Times | Dubious videos of ‘Underground Chicago’ have gone viral. Here’s the real story: Veteran city spelunkers say none appear to show the most extensive underground network in the city: the nearly 60 miles of freight tunnels 40 feet below. After supporting the city’s coal needs and transportation of goods for more than 50 years, those fell into disuse and have sat largely deserted for nearly 70 years and are now under tight surveillance by the city. * Tribune | Jewel-Osco pharmacy division argues National Labor Relations Act unconstitutional: Osco, which was acquired by Jewel in 1961, entered the fray after local labor board officials issued a complaint against it last month alleging it had refused to bargain in good faith with the union representing its pharmacists, Teamsters Local 727. […] The local represents about 500 pharmacy workers in stores throughout Cook, DuPage, Lake and McHenry counties, Brown said. The pharmacists are working under a collective bargaining agreement that expires in 2028, she said. * Sun-Times | Delays hit Metra Union Pacific-North trains: Trains on Metra’s Union Pacific-North line were running with delays Monday morning due to emergency track repairs in Evanston and a broken down inbound train near Fort Sheridan. * Daily Herald | ‘It was horrific’: Elgin immigrants advocates say ramped-up deportation push brings fear, unease: “We’re interacting with everyday people that have lived here for decades, that have gone about their day every day — going to work, like the man on Monday did. Now they’re being targeted primarily because of their appearance or their racial ethnicity and background. “It just seems that they’re picking people at random. (In recent) major interactions we’ve had, everyone was driving their work vehicle. I don’t know if that was just a racial statement … that someone in a construction truck or van will most likely be undocumented,” Cordová-Clough said. * Daily Herald | Carpentersville officials work to find fix for exposed water, sewer lines following dam removal: Two water and two sewer lines were installed roughly 60 years ago at the bottom of the Fox River north of the Carpentersville dam. However, all four lines became exposed this spring after water levels along the Fox River decreased dramatically. The depth of the river dropped, in part, because of a project that removed the Carpentersville dam. Other factors include drought conditions and the temporary closure of the Stratton Lock and Dam in McHenry for the boating season. “A year ago, it would have been underwater in the river,” Carpentersville Village Manager Brad Stewart said. “But now, where the exposure was identified is the new shoreline.” * Tribune | Oak Park and River Forest High School hires former Homewood-Flossmoor, Naperville administrator: Oak Park and River Forest High School District 200 has hired an administrator experienced in curriculum to be its new assistant superintendent for student learning to replace Laurie Fiorenza who resigned, effective June 30, without explanation in April. Fiorenza’s replacement will be Jen Hester, who has worked for the last five years as the director of student curriculum, instruction and professional development at Homewood-Flossmoor High School District 233, a one-school district like OPRF. * Daily Herald | ‘I just want to be whole’: Arlington Heights residents struggle to get homes repaired months after garbage truck blast: Video that showed the blast in front of her home on the corner of Euclid and Derbyshire avenues went viral online and made international news. But she’s upset fewer people are paying attention now. More than six months later, Battin’s three-bedroom ranch remains damaged — windows boarded up, the corner frame broken, and walls and ceilings cracked throughout — while she struggles to get more than $100,000 worth of repairs covered by insurance. * Daily Herald | Well-known Addison shopkeeper (and one-time presidential candidate) mulls retirement after robbery: Ed Gombos has a story about everything. Which is fitting since his 7,000-square-foot Addison USACO silk-screening shop — tucked into a nondescript business park along South Addison Road — has just about everything in it. There are the track suits once worn by U.S. Olympians, letters from various silver screen icons, including Charlton Heston and Robert Redford, a collection of T-shirts too numerous to count, books, photos, memorabilia from his ill-fated presidential run in 1996, as well as a wooden door that he is trying to sell for $100,000 because he believes it is adorned with the image of Jesus Christ. * Naperville Sun | Anderson’s Bookshop celebrates 150 years of independent bookselling in Naperville: ‘We will always find that book for you’: This year marks the 150th anniversary of Anderson’s Bookshop. From a small drugstore founded before the turn of the 20th century to a beloved bookseller sought after by some of today’s biggest authors, Anderson’s has stood the test of page-turning time. And all the while, the business has remained family-owned and most importantly, owners say, community-driven. “That’s what we do,” said Becky Anderson, fifth-generation owner of Anderson’s Bookshop. “We will always greet you. We will always find that book for you.” * Daily Herald | ‘It’s fun to bird with others’: Why DuPage Birding Club is going strong at 40 years: It was late 1984 when a dozen birders gathered in a College of DuPage classroom to discuss the idea of starting a club. At a second meeting, also at COD, the name DuPage Birding Club was chosen and club bylaws were adopted. The date was Jan. 14, 1985. Within two years the club boasted 109 members. Membership today surpasses 350. Club records list 23 founding members, and nearly half are still active. I contacted several of them and other longtime members to collect their thoughts about the club on its 40th anniversary. How, I asked, does DBC survive and continue to grow? And what makes it special? * WGLT | Peoria chapter of business mentorship group looks to relaunch Bloomington effort, amid possible federal cutbacks: Corbett, a retired technology business analyst, said SCORE Peoria gets less than $3,000 a year from the national organization that’s funded by about $17 million through the federal Small Business Administration. “You’ve got a national organization to run. You buy national advertising, you have a computer system that supports all of us that is funded by the national organization. The chapters, being largely volunteer, have relatively small budgets,” said Corbett, noting the proposed reconciliation bill currently before the U.S. Congress would wipe out the entire $17 million as of Oct. 1. * BND | Army Corps completes $40M upgrade to Madison County levee: A nearly $40 million Metro East project that officials believe will enhance flooding prevention along the Mississippi River has been completed, officials said Friday. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Wood River Drainage and Levee District said their federal-local partnership will address known deficiencies in the levee system by building 80 new relief wells, a drainage system and an access road. * KHQA | Taco Bell fender bender: Adams Co. Chairman cited for ‘leaving the scene’ in Quincy: Bret Scott Austin—the Adams County Board Chairman and District 1 board rep—was given a citation by the Quincy Police Department on June 19 for “leaving the scene” after hitting another car almost 24 hours earlier in the downtown Taco Bell parking lot. […] In the report, Austin stated that he was unaware he hit the vehicle and didn’t realize he had lost his truck’s running board until the next morning. […] Austin’s court date is set for August 5 at 9 a.m. He told KHQA Friday evening that he plans to plead guilty. * WCIA | Central Illinois cooling centers open this season: Scott Anderson, Iroquois County Emergency Management Agency Coordinator, sent out a release with locations that residents can go to keep cool during the summer heat. Anderson said the centers offer air-conditioned relief during extreme heat or when a heat advisory has been issued. * WTVO | ‘You guys showed up,’ Rockford hosts inaugural Ironman 70.3 race: First place finisher Cody Williams was born in Madison, WI but recently moved to Sycamore, IL. Williams crossed the line with a time of four hours and 10 minutes. Williams said the energy throughout the race was electric. “It was really cool; it was really special,” Williams said. “The energy, all the volunteers, you guys showed up, you showed out and it was special. There were so many people cheering every lap. I know it’s getting hotter out there, but man did all the volunteers, and everybody just make the day easier, even though it was not that easy.” * CNN | Former leader of anti-vaccine group founded by RFK Jr. to present at first meeting of new CDC vaccine advisers: Redwood’s scheduled presentation to the CDC vaccine advisory committee is unusual. Typically, presenters are members of the ACIP working groups who have spent months gathering and discussing evidence on a given topic. The vote on thimerosal was added days ago, and it’s not clear what the discussion and vote on thimerosal in flu vaccines will entail. * AP | The number of abortions kept rising in 2024 because of telehealth prescriptions, report finds: The latest survey, released Monday, tallied about 1.1 million abortions nationally last year, or about 95,000 a month. That is up from about 88,000 monthly in 2023 and 80,000 a month between April and December of 2022. WeCount began after Roe was overturned, and the 2022 numbers don’t include January through March, when abortions are traditionally at their highest. The number is still well below the historic peak in the U.S. of nearly 1.6 million a year in the late 1990s. * Texas Tribune | Gov. Greg Abbott vetoes THC ban, calls for regulation instead: The late-night action just minutes before the veto deadline keeps the Texas hemp industry alive for now, while spiking a top priority of Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick. [..] In a statement explaining his veto, Abbott argued that SB 3 would not have survived “valid constitutional challenges,” and that the bill’s total ban “puts federal and state law on a collision course,” noting that the 2018 federal Farm Bill legalized hemp products. * NBC | Republican attempt to rein in federal judges is stripped from Trump’s big bill: Trump and his allies have harshly criticized judges who have ruled against the administration. Although nationwide injunctions have only become commonplace in recent years, Trump is not the only president to have been frustrated by them, with the Biden and Obama administrations both suffering similar fates on various fronts. The language added to the bill would have required anyone seeking an injunction to pay a fee that would be equal to “the costs and damages sustained by the federal government” if it were to ultimately win the case. On major national policies, that amount could be in the billions of dollars and would deter people from filing lawsuits, legal experts said.
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That time the Pope wrote a thank you note to Gov. Quinn
Monday, Jun 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Mawa Iqbal at WBEZ…
* I did notice that the future Pope Leo declined to be added to the governor’s newsletter list… ![]()
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RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois
Monday, Jun 23, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments. Retailers like Eva in Galesburg enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.
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Congressional news roundup
Monday, Jun 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Evanston Now…
MDW Communications is a Florida-based “full-service marketing agency specializing in digital and direct mail.” They don’t have a pollster on staff, and they do not advertise polling services on their website. Color me skeptical. Also, this is from May…
Um, Baraka lost to Sherrill by 13 points a few weeks later. Oops. * So, with all that in mind… ![]() “The poll was conducted via text message by MDW Communications from June 12-15, with a margin of error of +/- 3% and sample size of 899 likely Democratic voters. Numbers are rounded.” I’ve never heard anyone speculate that Sen. Ram Villivalam is running for Congress. Also, who is Jim Andrew? * Back to the story…
* The Evanston Round Table has a good wrap-up of a recent candidate forum in that district. Click here to check it out. * In other news, 8th Congressional District Democratic candidate Dan Tully released a pretty good announcement video. Have a look… * Last week…
* More… * Evanston Roundtable | City government 101: What happens if Biss goes to Washington: City code actually names two different temporary mayors who can take the incumbent’s place in different situations: the mayor pro tempore (meaning “for the time being” and “pro tem” for short) and the acting mayor. Both are selected from the nine members of Evanston’s City Council, and both are charged “to perform the duties and possess all the rights and powers of the Mayor” until they’re no longer needed. * Dan Tully | I trust my fellow service members will abide by the Constitution: It is infuriating that we are even in this situation. Trump doesn’t care about members of the military, referring to fallen soldiers as “suckers” and “losers” for not escaping their obligations as he did during the Vietnam War. He denigrates the records of patriots such as the late U.S. Sen. John McCain, degrading his war hero status. He has saddled them with an incompetent secretary of defense in Pete Hegseth. Most dangerously, Trump intentionally disregards centuries of the military’s most essential tradition of nonpartisanship, eroding American faith in our most trusted institution. * MSNBC | IL Congressman: Masked ICE agent called police to ‘evict us as trespassers’ when attempting to enter Chicago facility: Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi joins The Weeknight to discuss the fight against Trump’s erosion of democratic norms – and what happened when he attempted an oversight visit at an ICE Facility in Chicago’s South Loop. * Daily Southtown | In backdrop of shuttered MetroSouth hospital in Blue Island, south suburban officials warn Medicaid cuts could undermine health care: Rita and other local officials, including U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly, visited the Blue Island Health Center Friday to highlight how Medicaid cuts put not only uninsured people, but entire communities and hospital systems at risk. Rita touted the Illinois General Assembly boosting funding by $40 million for federally qualified health care centers, but said “that will not be able to impact what is going to take place” the Senate passes the bill and Trump signs it into law. […] Kelly, who is vying to replace retiring U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, said “people will die” from lack of health care access provided through Medicaid. “It is never a good time for a hospital to close,” Kelly said. “But right now, our country is in the middle of a maternal mortality crisis, and Medicaid covers half of births nationwide.” * Politico | IL-09: Howard Rosenblum, a civil rights attorney, announced this morning that he’s running as a Democrat for Congress for the seat now held by retiring U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky. “I know how important equality under the law and full opportunity through civil rights is. My legal experience fighting back is exactly what we need in Washington right now,” said Rosenblum, who served on the U.S. Access Board during the Obama administration and was appointed to the Illinois Human Rights Commission by Gov. JB Pritzker.
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Then again, maybe not
Monday, Jun 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Earlier this month, we told you about a bill that passed both chambers to forbid artificial intelligence “therapy.” Well…
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Why Are Tax-Exempt Hospitals Getting Rich?
Monday, Jun 23, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Across Illinois, big hospital systems and PBMs are abusing the 340B drug discount program – making massive profits while patients drown in medical bills. One whistleblower called it “laundering money.” Here’s how the scam works: big hospitals buy discounted 340B drugs, bill patients full price, then split the difference with for-profit pharmacies and PBMs. 340B was meant to help Illinois communities in need. But there are no rules requiring hospitals and PBMs to pass savings on to patients. No transparency. No oversight. Just higher costs for working families, small businesses, and taxpayers. Meanwhile, tax-exempt hospitals cash in – and PBMs get a cut too.
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Some of the ‘19′ respond to Madigan’s sentencing
Monday, Jun 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
Discuss.
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Open thread
Monday, Jun 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * A cardinal checks out the song about birds at the 1:35 mark of Jesse Welles’ delightful tune… Hopin’ and prayin’ for some good flyin’ weather Keep the discussion strictly Illinois-centric, please. You can take yourself to a million places to talk about other stuff. Thanks.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Monday, Jun 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Federal cuts gut grants, threatening the work of Illinois researchers. Crain’s…
- Illinois institutions have played a key role in advancing the field. The first bone marrow transplant (in mice) was performed at the University of Chicago, where surgeons also pioneered several types of organ transplants, including the world’s first living-donor liver transplant in 1989. - In April, the White House announced a $790 million freeze on research funding for Northwestern. The University of Chicago has lost around 50 grants so far, totaling $40 million to $45 million, of which $10 million to $15 million affects the current fiscal year. * Tribune | Clean energy job training offers hope to hundreds: ‘It’s changed my life’: Eleven of 16 major training hubs statewide are now up and running, training hundreds of people. “This moment is massive,” said Juliana Pino, interim co-executive director at the Little Village Environmental Justice Organization. “It’s really significant because before the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, communities had to fight very hard to even have (access to job training) be respected and understood.” * WAND | New Illinois budget features massive investments for workforce development, SkillsUSA opportunities: The spending plan includes a $1.3 million increase for career and technical education programs to expand access to underserved students using an updated equity-based formula. It also features $2 million for SkillsUSA, a nonprofit educational organization getting students pre-apprenticeships and community college training. “When we start to think about workforce development and the return on investment that brings to our individual communities, there are some incredible opportunities that our students are going to have as a result of our budget,” said Eric Hill, Executive Director of SkillsUSA Illinois. * Sun-Times | Illinois could lose $18M in legal aid funding if Trump’s budget passes — hurting Legal Aid Chicago, others: The White House is proposing to eliminate Legal Services Corporation, the country’s largest funder of civil legal aid. If passed, thousands of Illinoisans would no longer receive free legal help through the state’s three legal aid groups. * Illinois Farmer Today | Knee-high by July? How corn, soybeans are faring around Illinois: “Overall plants are healthy and progressing through the growth stages and a wet June would go a long way to help the corn specifically catch up in height and overall growth,” Brand said. Meagan Diss, an Extension commercial ag specialist based in west-central Illinois, said recent rain systems have helped to replenish soil moisture. * Tribune | Taxes on vapes, Zyn and most tobacco products go up July 1: Illinois set the tax on vaping products at 15% of the wholesale price about six years ago. The first increase since then kicks in July 1, with the rate going up to 45%. Most tobacco products other than cigarettes, including cigars and chewing tobacco, will also be taxed at 45% of the wholesale price, up from a 36% levy that’s been in place for more than a decade. * Governing | Chicago’s Transit Systems Face a Fiscal Cliff: Sen. Villivalam recently spoke with Governing about the proposal to increase transit revenue and overhaul governance of the system before the budget gap results in layoffs and service cuts. The conversation has been edited for length and clarity. * AGRI News | Daily Herald opinion: The legislative shell game: GOP lawsuit draws attention to a practice that threatens faith in government: Lawmakers approved a third round of $2 million funding in support of the Local Food Infrastructure Grant Act. With funding provided through the Illinois Department of Agriculture, 19 local food projects received funds last year that strengthened the local food system and increased access to agricultural products grown and raised in the Prairie State. * Tribune | Despite moves by Indiana lawmakers, Illinois’ borders are unlikely to change: While the measure creating the commission sailed through the Republican-dominated Indiana statehouse on its way to the GOP governor’s desk, a companion proposal from one of Illinois’ most conservative state lawmakers went nowhere in the Democratic-controlled General Assembly before it adjourned its spring session. * Sun-Times | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s transportation department head exits: The leader of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s transportation department is leaving his post after more than 20 years with the agency. Tom Carney marks yet another City Hall stalwart dropping from the mayor’s administration. In a statement, Johnson said Carney will be “transitioning out of his role to focus on his family.” * Tribune | ICE took her mother. Now, a 6-year-old is left without a guardian or legal path back to reunite in Honduras.: Still, wearing a pink dress and ballerina flats, Gabriela, 6, smiled and twirled around holding a bouquet on her way home. An older neighbor who sometimes cares for her walked by her side. Just a week earlier, on June 4, her mother, Wendy Sarai Pineda, 39, was detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement outside an office in downtown Chicago during what was supposed to be a routine check-in, while Gabriela was at school. The little girl doesn’t understand why her mother vanished and had hoped her mother would be at her graduation, said Camerino Gomez, Pineda’s fiance. * Tribune | Lincoln Yards site is poised for new chapter, but debate over what went wrong with the stalled project continues: The war of words over what went wrong with developer Sterling Bay’s grand vision for its Lincoln Yards development on the North Side continues, even while the city waits to see what will happen with the sprawling site. Former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot recently fired back at Sterling Bay, saying company leadership blamed their project’s failure to launch on her one-term administration. Axios reporter Justin Kaufmann interviewed Lightfoot in May at the Hideout, a music club adjacent to the 53-acre site, and asked her about Sterling Bay’s failure to build the controversial Lincoln Yards project. She ripped company CEO Andy Gloor for having “repeatedly lied about me in public,” blaming her administration for the development’s lack of progress. * WGN | ‘Larger than life’: Chicagoans remember local musician, actor hit and killed on DuSable Lake Shore Drive: According to the Chicago Police Department, it’s believed Siddall was crossing the northbound lanes of DLSD around 3:30 a.m. when they were hit by a car. CPD released these photos of the white 2019 Honda Accord they’re looking for in connection with the hit and run. Siddall was a singer and a leader in Chicago’s Gay Men’s Chorus, where they served as President of the Membership Council. * CBS Chicago | Rescue crews pull multiple people from Lake Michigan as crowds pack beaches amid heat wave: “We don’t have a boat that’s operable in any type of wave action,” said Winthrop Harbor Fire Chief Rocco Campanella. Officials said large rocks were put in the lake by the state to break waves and help with erosion in 2023. The mounds attract swimmers, but are extremely hazardous. On Tuesday, a 20-year-old man drowned at Illinois Beach State Park. “The breakwalls, we think, are creating a rip current effect out there for people,” Campanella said. * Tribune | Skokie budget restores 1% grocery tax, hikes water rates but freezes property tax: The move took place as the Skokie Village Board approved the upcoming fiscal year’s budget, which also contains a 15% water rate hike, but maintains the village’s freeze on the property tax rate for the 36th year in a row. Essentially, residents will not see their grocery tax go up; it will, in effect, remain the same, though if Skokie and the other suburbs had not restored it, grocery shoppers would have paid less tax at the checkout counter. * Shaw Local | Ex-dairy owner Jim Oberweis to fundraise in Kane County Sunday for Florida Congressional run: Former Illinois State Sen. Jim Oberweis is returning to Kane County for a fundraiser to support his run for Congress in Florida’s 19th District. Oberweis, formerly of Sugar Grove, is running in the 2026 Republican primary seat on Florida’s southern Gulf Coast being vacated by Byron Donalds in the 2026 primary election. * Shaw Local | ‘Industrial condos’ proposed in Crystal Lake: Developers are looking to create six industrial “condos” in Crystal Lake to house manufacturing businesses – space that local planning commissioners see as a potential incubator for new local businesses. Architect Tony Sarillo and property owner Steve Theofanous propose six “light industrial condominium buildings” on three vacant lots. * Daily Southtown | Pride Fest in Irwin Park: ‘Homewood has my back’: U.S. Robin Kelly, the 2nd District representative who announced in May she is running for the U.S. Senate, spoke about not giving up the fight. “Despite what looks like an ugly climate and despite what is an ugly climate, those of us out here and beyond are saying they are not taking this,” she said. “Do me a favor. Do not get weary. That’s what they want you to do. * Tribune | Pet hotel dubbed Ritz-Carlton for dogs to open in Deerfield: K9 Resorts, a national pet hotel chain which bills itself as the Ritz-Carlton for dogs, is opening its first Illinois location Monday in Deerfield. The facility features individual suites with high-definition TVs tuned 24/7 to DogTV and Animal Planet, premium shampoos in its bathing salons, antimicrobial play areas, an air purification system and of course, room service. * Farm Progress | ‘Every decision I make this year is the wrong one’: “There’s algae on the field and it’s as green as it can be. Earthworms are lying on top of the soil, dead. Snail shells are everywhere. “The ground is dead. It’s anaerobic. It’s growing algae and mold.” That’s how Kelly Robertson describes one southern Illinois field, but it could be anywhere across southern Illinois, where rainfall has topped 20 inches in April, May and June. * Journal Courier | Brown sees rise in calls to domestic violence hotline amid statewide increase: Brown County tied with Piatt County in 2024 for the highest percentage increase in contacts to the Illinois Domestic Violence Hotline, according to a report from The Network. The report found the counties had two contacts with the hotline last year — up from none in 2023. Brown and Piatt counties were tied for first in largest increase in contacts to the hotline. Logan County came in second with 16 contacts — an 81% increase from 2023 — while Livingston County came third with 30 contacts, or a 77% increase. * WGLT | Sale of site for proposed shelter village in Bloomington is approved: The Bridge would consist of 50 tiny sleeping cabins on a fully enclosed campus, with a total occupancy of 60 adults, according to materials previously provided to the McLean County Board. It would have on-site laundry, toilets and bathing facilities. The approximately 75,000-square-foot site was sold to Home Sweet Home Ministries [HSHM] for $250,000. * WGLT | Bloomington removes annual licensing fee from proposed massage business regulations: City staff removed the proposed yearly $250 fee from the ordinance the city council tabled on June 9 after massage parlor owners complained they were being unfairly targeted and weren’t consulted. City staff proposed the regulations as a way to prevent sex trafficking, amid claims that some of the businesses were engaging in illegal sexual activity. * WCIA | U of I hosting STEM academic boot camp for student veterans: This specific program requires each participant to complete 75 academic hours, which would simulate a typical “finals week” in college. The purpose of this is to prepare student veterans for the demands of academic life as they transition from military careers to higher education. * WAND | Golf carts soon to take to the streets in Mattoon: Regulations in the ordinance require golf carts to drive in the same direction as traffic. It will also be illegal to drive on sidewalks, bike paths and multi-use paths. Drivers must have a valid driver’s license and be at least 18 years old. Children who need to use a car seat or a booster seat are not permitted to ride in a golf cart. * Illinois Times | Great Race coming to Springfield: For the first time, Springfield will be an overnight stop for drivers in the Hemmings Motor News Great Race, an event that began in 1983 and this year starts in St. Paul, Minnesota, on June 21 and finishes in Irmo, South Carolina, on June 29. The pit stop in Springfield will be on Monday, June 23, when drivers will display their 1974-and-older vintage automobiles to anyone who wants to see them. They’ll also mingle to discuss what it’s like to race more than 2,000 miles in cars that, in some cases, date to when William Howard Taft was president (1909-13). * SJ-R | New summer beer coming to Illinois State Fair thanks to local nonprofit and microbrewery: The new beer is a light summer lager meant to be washed down, thrice. “I have an old rule: people should be able to drink three, the first one should be gone before they know it because it tastes so good,” Reisch said. “Like really good food, you just have to literally push yourself away from the table as a solution to not overeating.” * Illinois Times | Springfield’s Reisch Beer makes a comeback: For more than 50 years, Reisch Beer lived on in the memories and stories of many Springfield families. But it was about more than just the beer. The Reisch family was a generous community supporter. They helped found the Citizens Street Railway Company, Illini Country Club, the Springfield Art Association and the Sangamo Club. They also were major contributors to the Springfield YMCA/YWCA, St. John’s Hospital and Blessed Sacrament Church and School. And they donated land to help establish Washington Park. According to George, his family’s philosophy was “Give till it hurts.” * WCIA | Cat back home in Central Illinois after three years, thousand-mile travel: Doug and Michele Carder of VALOR Rescue said their cat, Ivy, was stolen from PetSmart in Champaign back in 2022. […] After years of what-ifs and worries… the Carders got a message that Ivy was in Albuquerque, New Mexico. “I looked at it and I’m like ‘No, this is a scam, I just know it’s a scam,’” Michele said. “I plugged in the microchip number they had listed on the email and it was her.” * Forbes | Tesla Misses Robotaxi Launch Date, Goes With Safety Drivers: Tesla’s much-anticipated June 22 “no one in the vehicle” “unsupervised” Robotaxi launch in Austin is not ready. Instead, Tesla is operating a limited service with Tesla employees on board the vehicle to maintain safety. Tesla will use an approach that was used in 2019 by Russian robotaxi company Yandex, putting the “safety driver” in the passenger’s seat rather than the driver’s seat. (Yandex’s robotaxi was divested from Russian and now is called AVRide.) * MSN | Rahm Emanuel confronts ‘awkward’ prospect of facing a home-state rival in the 2028 presidential race: “Look, JB and I are friends,” Emanuel said in an interview. The two recently had dinner, he noted. They text. When Emanuel came into town in his capacity as U.S. ambassador to Japan, they made a point of getting breakfast. “We’re going to continue to be friends, but if we’re running for the same position, it will be awkward.” * AP | How Senate Republicans want to change the tax breaks in Trump’s big bill: Republicans in the two chambers don’t agree on the size of a deduction for state and local taxes. And they are at odds on such things as allowing people to use their health savings accounts to help pay for their gym membership, or whether electric vehicle and hybrid owners should have to pay an annual fee. The House passed its version shortly before Memorial Day. Now the Senate is looking to pass its version. While the two bills are similar on the major tax provisions, how they work out their differences in the coming weeks will determine how quickly they can get a final product over the finish line. President Donald Trump is pushing to have the legislation on his desk by July 4th. * Press Release | “One Big, Beautiful Bill” Has More Provisions That Violate the Byrd Rule, According to Senate Parliamentarian: “There is no better way to define this Big Beautiful Betrayal of a bill than families lose, and billionaires win. Democrats are on the side of families and workers and are scrutinizing this bill piece by piece to ensure Republicans can’t use the reconciliation process to force their anti-worker policies on the American people,” said Ranking Member Jeff Merkley. “The Byrd Rule is enshrined in law for a reason, and Democrats are making sure it is enforced.” * NYT | Compass Sues to Stop ‘Zillow Ban’: Compass, the real estate brokerage that sells more houses than any of its competitors in the United States, has sued Zillow, the country’s largest real estate site — in a legal showdown that accuses Zillow of gatekeeping home listings and of breaking federal antitrust laws. In its suit that was filed in New York federal court on Monday morning, Compass claims that Zillow is engaged in an anticompetitive conspiracy to maintain a monopoly over digital home listings.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Monday, Jun 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Monday, Jun 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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